Affiliation:
1. Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia
2. Charles University, Prague, Czechia
Abstract
This article uses the gender perspective to compare the 2020 Belarus protests and the Arab Spring and its aftermath in Egypt (2011–13). It argues that in both cases authoritarian militarized hegemonic masculinities, articulated through authoritarian body politics, attempted to suppress the protest movements. The latter, in turn, drew on a number of gendered images and symbols to perform its counter-hegemonic practices of resistance. The study employs discourse analysis and visual analysis methods and draws on a broad selection of data from Egyptian and Belarusian online newspapers and social media for the respective periods. The article concludes that, despite historical and cultural differences between the two countries, there are notable similarities in the ways gender is politicized and performed by both the regimes and the protest movements. These findings suggest a close connection between authoritarianism and militarized hegemonic masculinities, which can be established cross-regionally and cross-culturally.
Publisher
University of California Press
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Development
Reference74 articles.
1. Amnesty International. (2012) Amnesty International annual report 2012 - Egypt. 24 May. Available from: https://www.refworld.org/docid/4fbe3940c.html [Accessed 29 July 2022].
2. Awad, A. (n.d.) Alaa Awad - the artist. Available from: http://alaa-awad.com/murals_mohamed-mahmoud-street_cairo_egypt [Accessed 29 July 2022].
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